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February 29th, 2008

Fleet Foxes

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The countryside has come alive with the uncertain harmonies of the wind and the trees; the piper prances through the meadows, a band of squirrels trailing close behind. Fleet Foxes are there too: shimmering voices straining to match the cadences of the Earth below. The bushy-tailed quintet has been absent for quite some time, now. Chased by hounds to the far corners of the isle, they’ve picked up the sounds of the city, the insights of the urbane, and the knowledge that only time can afford. Even now, home at last, the language of trees is still spoken. The grass is still warm, friendly. The piper will ramble with the seasons, but the Fleet Foxes have learned his songs.

The Sun Giant EP was released yesterday through SubPop.

[download] “Drops in the River” + “Sun Giant” + “English House

2008 Tour Dates:

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More dates after the jump!
Read the rest of this entry »
February 28th, 2008

Animal Collective Announces Water Curses EP

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This just in: Animal Collective will be releasing Water Curses, their much anticipated follow-up to Strawberry Jam, on May 6. According to its press release, “All tracks find Animal Collective exploring strange new waters….” Oddly enough, that doesn’t surprise me.

Water Curses tracklist:
01 Water Curses
02 Street Flash
03 Cobwebs
04 Seal Eyeing

[download] “Peacebone” from Strawberry Jam

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February 28th, 2008

Video Naturalismo: Jodorowsky's "La Cravate"

Alejandro Jodorowsky’s first film, La Cravate, was considered lost for 50 years until it was recently found in a German attic and released last May on a digital box set of all of his films. This 35 minute short was shot in 1957 and traces the themes of love and suffering that Jodorowsky would later draw more strongly upon in his masterpieces El Topo and The Holy Mountain. I’m always hesitant to give too much away about what I post, preferring to have the reader experience it fresh but if you need your interest piqued; La Cravate is like Eyes without a face and Frankenstein painted on the screen by James Ensor, a cruel tale of a Parisian headswoman conspiring with a lover who desires it all.

La Cravate Part 1

La Cravate Part 2

La Cravate Part 3



February 28th, 2008

Mp3 Hosting Issues

Not sure what is going on exactly but if you are having trouble downloading our mp3s today it should be resolved soon. We’re talking to our hosting company now so it shouldn’t be much longer.

Sorry for the down time!

UPDATE: Looks like everything is OK again!

February 27th, 2008

The Dodos Expand Tour, Announce Album, Release Single

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The Dodo’s – aka Meric Long – have been picking up a head of steam as of late. Not only were they just featured in Entertainment Weekly’s “Artists to Watch” (not that EW is a very reliable bellwether of good music, but hell it’s great news for them!), but they’ve also just vastly expanded their U.S. tour, announced the release date of their new album Visiter (March 18), but have also just posted a new song for us to enjoy.

[download] “Jodi” from Visiter

[photo © elizabeth weinberg]

2008 Tour Dates

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More dates after the jump!

Read the rest of this entry »

February 27th, 2008

Brownie McGhee & Sonny Terry

Brownie McGhee (sitting at right) sings and speaks with a disarming, soulful simplicity. His eyes speak a language of languor, his lips curl into wistful grins with such ease and honesty that you want to cozy up by his feet like a labrador puppy, lapping up stories of the road and songs of the downtrodden. The songs of Brownie McGhee and Sonny Terry -- a musical duo for nearly their entire professional lives -- are melancholy at heart but never sacrifice a sense of celebratory, resplendent joy.

Enjoy this performance of their classic tune “I Couldn’t Believe My Eyes,” from Pete Seeger’s Rainbow Quest.

February 26th, 2008

Phosphorescent tours

Phosphorescent

Matthew Houck’s band, Phosphorescent, is starting their tour across the United States and eventually Europe tomorrow. I don’t want to throw out any comparisons or hyphenated genres — just check it out for yourself.

I haven’t heard many of their tracks but what I have heard is most excellent and I’m going to their show in Northampton, MA on Saturday. I lost my magic 8 ball so I’ll have to wait until next week to tell you about the show.

You can grab some of their tracks from a Daytrotter session here: [Link]

And some YouTube:

At Death, A Proclamation

Full Grown Man

And last, but not least, the myspace page with more songs, videos, and tour dates: [Link]

February 25th, 2008

Dress Devendra!

Oh, Monday. Why dost thou curse me with your doleful portent of five work-days!? Well, at least Devendra Banhart was kind enough to stoke the coals of procrastination by adding a page on his website devoted to the raiment that dwells in his closet. Weeee!

[click here to dress Devendra]

February 22nd, 2008

Akron/Family: The Naturalismo Interview

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Seth Olinsky of Akron/Family was kind enough to answer some of my questions before embarking on a nationwide tour. I want to thank Seth for putting up with me, and for creating some of the most dynamic music I’ve heard in a long, long time. Click here for spring/summer tour dates.

~

Naturalismo: Both Meek Warrior and Love is Simple seem thematically consistent, in terms of the outlook projected in both. Meek Warrior seems to be inspired by Buddhist thought (particulary the Heart Sutra in Gone Beyond) whereas Love Is Simple seems borne from the Advaitic school of Nondualism (“No point exists” – There’s So Many Colors). Do you write albums with lyrical themes in mind?

Seth Olinsky: Meek Warrior was developed a little more thematically than Love is Simple. Meek was a spur of the moment recording session in Chicago with our hero free jazz drummer Hamid Drake. When we heard of the opportunity, we just hung out in a hotel room and threw together a few songs that had been sitting around that seemed to work together. Part of the selection process was that the songs had themes of or were inspired by Buddhism. Love is Simple didn’t come together this way. It was at first just all of us bringing new songs to the table and then editing down from there. But early on I remember Ryan playing the song ” Don’t be afraid, you’re already Dead ” and the chorus of Love is Simple was so simple and beautiful, I remember thinking that it would be a great thematic foundation for the record. Love is certainly a powerful transformative tool in Buddhism, but seemed to have the ability to reach out even further.

N: Lyrics aside, I read in an interview with Dana Janssen that, musically, Love Is Simple is “almost like a tip of a hat to the idea of a classic album, like ‘Led Zeppelin 4‘. It’s us shaking hands with that idea, making peace with it and getting it out of our system so we can progress to the next evolution of what the band’s going to be.” I’ve also heard that the band is constantly writing new songs. Have you begun writing new material since the release of Love is Simple, and are there any specific sonic themes that you are exploring this time around?

S.O.: I agree with Dana. I think that we put a lot of work into developing the band in the classic, iconic sense, and that this album was really us trying to fulfill that childhood dream that people our age have of the classic album: Led Zeppelin IV , or Sgt Peppers, or Harvest. Of course, the times are a different and there are some inherent problems with trying to “recreate” or “relive” classics. In this sense I don’t think it was a total and complete success in and of it self, but I still consider it a great success as an education. I still think that roots and history and form are important, and I think that one can only go so far without a strong foundation. My hope is that this kind of dedication to the things we grew up with, loved, and looked up to, will provide a good foundation for us and allow us to explore new and different ideas. As for new material, we have been working on new ideas. We are trying to take our time with the new material we are developing, but are all becoming more and more happy with the new ideas we are generating and are hoping to set aside some real time this summer to write and record.

N: I recently wrote about Donovan’s involvement with David Lynch’s push for Transcendental Meditation to be incorporated into school curricula. What potential does spirituality, or at least the ability to find an inner guru, have in society?

S.O.: I actually grew up doing TM. I don’t know exactly what you mean by this question. I feel like spirituality has always had some role in various societies throughout history. In our society, I am not sure. I think that there are some ideas that come from things like TM, for example Deepak Chopra’s talks on abundance and affluence, these could be very positive things for kids to learn in school. Not necessarily for the kids to live a “spiritual” life, but just a better and happier one that can be more beneficial for them and the others around them.

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N: Some say the universe was created. Others say that it always existed and is forever undergoing transformation. Some say it is subject to eternal laws. Others deny even causality. Some say the world is real. Others that it has no being whatsoever. Do you believe consciousness is a window to a dream, or is consciousness a window into a bedrock of physical reality?

S.O.: This is ultimately over my head. A question better suited for an astrophysicist or a philosopher. When I was younger, I wanted to be a philosopher. I think that now, the beautiful thing about being a musician, as opposed to a philosopher or a politician, is that you can communicate and share with people of all different belief systems and world views, and that you can actually effect change as well. If the change is honest and without agenda as much as possible, I even think you can inspire good–though the philosopher might catch us on that word. Fortunately the musician often has the concrete evidence of smiling or dancing to help us along our way.

N: Can psychedelic drugs be a helpful supplement to one’s spiritual development or are drugs only a distraction from the self-realization that can only come from discipline and meditation?

S.O.: I am not an authority on this question either, and I would rather not be judgmental or influential on this topic. I, personally, stopped using any kind of drugs besides coffee and an occasional drink after high school because I wanted to focus on practicing and studying music.

N: How has the band’s creative process changed since the departure of Ryan Vanderhoof?

S.O.: I started to get into this in the answer to question 2. I think that we have been given this reverse gift in Ryan’s departure. Even though he is our dear friend and we always envisioned moving on into the future as four, not only has is absence forced us to recreate ourselves, it has truly given us the opportunity. It is kind of like having a card removed from a house of cards. You can either just plug something that is roughly the same size back in, or you can take the opportunity to really look at the structure you had and question its entire integrity. We can now look at the whole history of our band and see things that we left behind that we want to resurrect and things that we’ve always wanted but never given ourselves the time or space to develop. There is a lot of personal understanding that has come out of it for us and a lot of clarity as far as empowering ourselves to make clear creative decisions. And for the first time, we are really giving ourselves time to try things out and fail, and research, and try again. There is a certain openness and adventurousness that is really exciting. I hope that we can successfully see it through to the next step and capture it in radical waves of light and sound for people to enjoy.

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N: Your shows could best described as communal. Everyone’s dancing, everyone’s singing, and everyone seems connected. The line between performer and audience is always blurred. You’re going to be playing at the sprawling Coachella music festival this spring. Do you feel your performance will be affected by the distance created between the band and the audience? And, if you continue to draw larger and larger audiences, how will you recreate the communal atmosphere of your smaller shows?

S.O.: This has always been a problem. When we first started, we played for 15 or 20 people, and there was a focus and intimacy; often times you could hear a pin drop. But this is not very possible with 3 or 400 people. And so with time we developed ways to communicate in that forum. I do not know for sure, but I feel like it is part of the creative process to develop these means of communication with the audience, and this is always changing and growing. It seems like a give and take. I think for us, one of the clearest developments has been an extreme focus on rhythm. There are many delicate timbrel things you can do with a small audience or someone wearing headphones. There are dynamic shifts and quick surprises. My guess is that some of this musical subtlety can be lost on a huge festival audience. But I think that rhythm is such a grounded and historical and boundless communicator that there really are not many limits. Plus, with something like the Grateful Dead. There is this unspoken sense of people coming together to take part in a certain “space”, a communal “space”. And I think that developing this, not necessarily the exact way the Dead did, but in some new way, will be very helpful in playing to larger audiences. I don’t think that intimacy has to be lost.

N: Thinking about the phrase “Love is Simple,” I come to two conclusions about its possible meaning: first, that love is a universal fabric woven through everything, therefore its oneness has inherent simplicity and, second, that to love is our natural state, therefore its expression should be effortless. What does ‘love is simple’ mean to you?

S.O.: I like the second idea a lot, however I think in our own experiences it is all too simple to think about how much effort it takes to love. Unfortunately I think that a lot of reviewers took it at face value as a simple or oft-said naive statement. I think however that it is quite a complicated statement to contend with. There is some deep inherent resonance with the idea that love is natural and simple, that “its expression should be effortless” as you said, but somehow this is often not the case. Strangely enough it seems to take a huge amount of work, learning, and self development to really be able to love simply. Ultimately, we weren’t really trying to tell anyone anything, just an idea we were trying to work on ourselves and have open to others along the way.

~

[download] “Lake Song/New Ceremonial Music for Moms” – from Love is Simple

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=tyler=

February 22nd, 2008

Fire on Fire

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Fire on Fire is, as their name suggests, a duality wrapped in a singularity, a paradox that somehow bears ramshackle cohesion through its own contradictions. It’s the sound of the American soil: gritty, coarse, uncouth, and consummately impolite. It’s as if the band members were raised by wolves amidst the oak pillars of Maine, admiring the villagers’ harvest dance from afar but never truly understanding their steps. This is folk music made by folks who never claimed to live amongst the people. The compositions, however, are expertly played – guitars, banjos, bass fiddles, panpipes, hand percussion, ouds, shakers, dobros, and accordions are stitched together with such derelict joy that you can’t help the urge to howl too.

[download] “Hangman” – from self-titled debut EP (Young God)

February 21st, 2008

Coming Soon…Naturalismo Interviews Akron/Family

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You heard it here first, folks. Space/Folk/Funk/Fusion/Freestyle dryads Akron/Family talked with me about the meaning of love and a whole lotta Belgian waffles. Keep your nose to the grindstone in the coming week – AkAk’s comin’  yo way!

In the meantime, enjoy the shamanic bliss that is “There’s So Many Colors” from their most recent LP Love is Simple.

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